An Undergraduate Introduction to Financial Mathematics | 
enlarge | Author: J. Robert Buchanan Publisher: World Scientific Publishing Company Category: Book
List Price: $49.00 Buy New: $35.20 You Save: $13.80 (28%)
New (6) Used (4) from $35.20
Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 942724
Media: Hardcover Pages: 284 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9 x 6.1 x 0.8
ISBN: 9812566376 Dewey Decimal Number: 330.01513 EAN: 9789812566379
Publication Date: April 11, 2006 Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description This textbook provides an introduction to financial mathematics and financial engineering for undergraduate students who have completed a three or four semester sequence of calculus courses. It introduces the theory of interest, random variables and probability, stochastic processes, arbitrage, option pricing, hedging, and portfolio optimization. The student progresses from knowing only elementary calculus to understanding the derivation and solution of the Black Scholes partial differential equation and its solutions. This is one of the few books on the subject of financial mathematics which is accessible to undergraduates having only a thorough grounding in elementary calculus. It explains the subject matter without hand waving arguments and includes numerous examples. Every chapter concludes with a set of exercises which test the chapter s concepts and fill in details of derivations.
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| Customer Reviews:
very nice introduction to the financial math September 6, 2008 Crni (Montenegro) Having good math background, I found this book excellent as an introduction to the financial engineering field. I tried first with Mathematics for Finance: An Introduction to Financial Engineering (Springer Undergraduate Mathematics Series) book - while being very good book in itself, this one was based upon building an intuition for economics side of the story, which didn't worked very well for me. On the other side An Undergraduate Introduction to Financial Mathematics builds more upon pure math approach, which worked very well for me. But this is definitely not something to scare off readers that are not math inclined - all needed math is derived here, up to the very basic details. Armed with that understanding, I'm at the moment proceeding with Options, Futures, and Other Derivatives with Derivagem CD (7th Edition) (Prentice Hall Series in Finance) for more advanced insight, and so far it is going very well. The other reviewer comment with regard to typos is unfortunately true for the first edition, but at the moment second edition seems to be in preparation (follow the link I provided above), so hopefully this will be fixed soon (and the author was maintaining up-to-data errata list on his page anyway). So - overall I would heartily recommend this book to anyone with solid math background looking for a first book to start getting acquainted with the field.
Poorly Written Book July 29, 2007 Steve J. Snyder (New York, NY) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book is rife with typographical and grammatical errors. The content is not terrible, but there are much better books out there if you're looking for an introduction to Financial Mathematics. Mark Joshi's books are far superior.
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